onl, COUNTS y Times mt of, t for ac- of remit- he Lake railroad 1dard Oil and Jury | y was re- / h $25,000 9 counts, offense. rer a per- February, vhich is silent on pany and inder the is a fine offense, offenses int of re- ts is $8,- the jury o the oil vhich the the pro- Company jury dur- flicials of iment at- Western son, local hore, and edule ex- ‘ommerce who testi- igher offi- the stand m of the ndard Oil e present Grammer ly, Audi- s of the itchinson, Any. 0il to Shicago & ck Island te, will be WO MEN That He ted a re- he execu- 1 the case ur Adam, , the Wil- been con- 1y on the use of the who said he was the three schooner led from and for convicted. ed in the SM >andidates s’ conven- » placed in ket: ockslager, Ss senator, county; es Hatta- ce of the Denning, governor, m county; Galloway, in which note. =NTS. of the fu- xd Chicago 1is fathers sentenced al., Octob- ion of the cVicar, a | been liv- aled. edding Dr. years old, ne of his e Sykes in sion of a ne at Sey- aha, Neb., ras fatally x children de by the wreck of 3 the cap- eamer for 1bandoning b»anie. e that the Lamberg, e pope as es to look 3,000,000 ny has re- all grades t a gallon. s follows: ater white, headlight, locence, 11 agile. an osceous nches long s removed red Amos to his full as been an , fractured s two years flowers fall 1y counter- 4 879 $ i o . - “ An Olid Painter's Tdeas. The Autumn season is ooming more and more to be recognized as a most suitable time for house-paint- ing. ; There is no frost deep in the wood to make trouble for even the best job of painting, and the general season- ing of the Summer has put the wood irto good condition in every way. The weather, moreover, is more like- ly to be settled for the necessary length of time to allow all the coats to thoroughly dry—a very important precaution. An old and successful painter 3aid to the writer the other day: “House owners would get more for their money if they would allow their painters to take more time, es- pecially between coats. Instead of allowing barely time for the surface to get dry enough not to be ‘tacky,’ several days (weeks would not be too much) should be allowed so that the coat might set through and through. -It is inconvenient, of course, but, if one would suffer this slight inconvenience, it would add two or three years to the life of the paint. “All this is assuming, of course, that the paint used is the very best to be had—the purest of white lead and the purest of linseed oil, un- mixed with any cheapener. If the cheap mixtures, often known as ‘White Lead’ and oil which has been doctored with fish oil, benzine, corn- ofl, or other of the adulterants known to the trade, are used, all the precautions of the skilled painter are useless to prevent the cracking and peeling which make houses unsightly in a year or go and, therefore, make painting bills too frequent and costly. * ‘The house owner should have his painter bring the ingredients to the premises separately—white lead of some well-known, reliable brand and linseed oil of equal quality — and mix the paint just before applying it.” Painting need not be expensive and unsatisfactory if the old painter's suggestions are followed. Joan of Arc or Jeanne Darc? On seeing the above caption in the London Pall Mail Gazette, R. St. J. Corbett was moved to write to that paper the following remonsérance: “It is strange that English folk and Americans should tarry on the above misspelling into the twentieth cent- ury, for on the authority of Michelet, the historian, of Dean Kitchen, and of other students, the young woman’s name was unquestionably Jeanne Darc, out of which no cne can manu- facture Joan of Arc, not only were her parents peasants, but there was no Arc anywhere near of which she could be ‘de.’ One can see how the mistake originally arose, but the twentieth century, in the interests of Soa: should not countenance it.” The Open Door in Egypt. ~ While there can be no doubting the intention of the British govern- ment to henceforth dominate openly the political control of Egypt as a part of the British empire, the pro- posals of Lord Cromer clearly indi- cate that there is to be equal. op- portunity for all nationalities and full respect for acquired and vested rights. In other words, modern Egypt is to be governed on the open- door principle so strongly advocated by the United States in China and the Far East generally. While England ‘will rule, she does not propose to insist upon any monopoly of trade or franchises, but on the contrary, extends equal opportunity to all com- ers.—New Orleans Picayune. Fortified Russian Monastery. At Solovetsk, in Russia, is a re- markable fortified monastery. It is enclosed on every side by a wall of granite bowlders nearly a mile in cir- cumference. The monastery itself is very strongly fortified, being support- ed by round and square towers about 30 feet in height, with walls 20 feet in thickness. The monastery consists in reality of six churches, which are completely filled with statues of all kinds and precious stones. Upon the walls and the towers surrounding these churches are mounted huge guns, which in the time of the Cri- mean War were directed against the British White Sea squadron.—New York Tribune. A WINNING START. A Perfectly Digested Breakfast Makes Nerve Force For the Day. Everything goes wrong if the breakfast lies in your stomach like a mud pie. What you eat does harm if you can’t digest it—it turns to poi- son. . A bright lady teacher found this to be true, even of an ordinary light breakfast of eggs and toast. She gays: “Two years ago I contracted a very annoying form of indigestion. My stomach was in such condition that a simplebreakfast of fruit, toast and egg gave me great distress. “I was slow to believe, that trouble could come frem such a simple diet, but finally had to give it up, and found a great change upon a cup of hot Postum and Grape-Nuts with cream, for my morning meal. For more than a year I have held to this course, and have not suffered except when injudiciously varying my diet. “I have been a teacher for several years and find that my easily digest- ed breakfast means a saving of ner- vous force for the entire day. My gain of ten pounds in weight also causes me to want to testify to the value of Grape-Nuts. “Grape-Nuts' holds first rank at our table.” Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. “There's a reason.”” Read the lit- tle book, “The Road to Wellville,” in pkgs. A scientist says that Se odorane will cure insomnia. A process of producing morphine directly from the poppy is announced by the American Department of Agri- culture. It is estimated that the corn-stalks grown on a single acre will yield about one hundred and seventy gal- lons of commercial alcohol. Dr. Wolff, a well knowa authority on the subject, calls attention to the high mortality from cancer in the beer drinking districts of Germany. He instances Bavaria and Salsburg, both great beer drinking-centres. Both. of these districts show high mortality among cancer patients. The new method of producing gen- eral anesthesia proposed by Schnei- derlin of Berlin, consists in giving three hypodermic injections—two hours, one hour and half an hour before operation—of scopolamine with some morphine. Unconscious- ness continues some hours after the operation. The recent discovery by Mr. Allen, a Dublin veterinary surgeon, that or- dinary turpentine is an antidote to carbolic acid has aroused great inter- est. A well known chemical expert in Dublin tested the efficacy of the antidote on a dog. A dose of car- bolic acid was first administered, and when all the ordinary symptoms of carbolic poisoning had been devel- oped, oil of turpentine was applied, and the dog recovered within a short time. Loss of sleep proves to be the curi- ous effect that may limit man’s mountain-climbing. Dr. Bullock Workman mentions that in his camp in the Himalayas at 19,358 feet, members of his party were kept awake by lack of breath, and on doz- ing off would suddenly awake gasp- ing. He concludes that inability to sleep may itself be sufficient to keep climbers from going beyond twenty- three to twenty-five thousand feet. According to the American Manu- facturer, the coal deposits of North America are estimated to contain nearly as much as those of Europe, or 681,000,000,000 tons, but even this gigantic figure is completely dwarfed by Asia's wealth of coal, as to which it is at present impossible to make an even approximate esti- mate. China more especially seems to possess inexhaustible supplies, and a German scientist has put the coal otis of the province of Shansi alone at 1,200,000,000,000 tons. THE EX-MESSENGER BOY. In England He Has Developed Into a Very Serious Problem. The Postmaster-General’s recent appeal to employers to give prefer- ence to ex-telegraph and messenger boys must draw attention once more to one of the ‘principal causes of the “unskilled unemployed” difficulty, says London Modern Society. There is no reason for the promotion of all the telegraph boys when they are no longer boys. Nor has their train- ing in the Postal Service taught them anything but habits of cleanli- ness and the use of their legs. At sixteen or seventeen the boy is turned loose with no special aptitude and, having earned a decent wage hitherto, he expects to do as well with equally unskilled labor as a man. Hence the crowds clamoring about the dock gates. But the evil spreads far beyond the postal service; for the short- sighted British parent of the less provident classes jumps at the pros- pect of the boy's addition to the household budget. Therefore the boy, so soon as he is free from school (and often before that), is set to run errands, to sit on the tail of a van, to perform any one of the hundred odd jobs that bring in a boy's wage—but cease when the boy reaches ‘adolescence. A typically modern instance is that of the goif caddie. He is on the links in his thousands every day of the week, and makes a good thing of it—for a year or two. But the caddie who has become a man has learned no trade, no handicraft. The royal game of golf may have rejuvenated many old men, but it has certainly ruined thousands of boys.’ Indeed, the case of the caddie is peculiarly typical of this evil of early wage-earning. For the caddie lives an easy and healthy life in the open air; he earns good wages—for a boy—and, in spite of all regulations to the contrary, may depend upon generous perquisites. But what is to become of these thousands of boys when they have to face a man’s re- sponsibilities with no training to help them? We suspect that a large percentage take the course that is practically but a temporary refuge for the unskilled—and enlist. And here we may find the explanation of the dismal figures supplied by a re- cent investigator, who found that about sixty per cent. of the male “casuials’’ in our workhouses are “old soldiers.” For its white population, South Africa is perhaps the greatest market in the world for musical instruments. It spends for them $1,000,000 a year, half of which is for pianos. FINANCE AND TRADE REVIEW DUN'S WEEKLY SUMMARY Industry Maintains Phenomenal Re- sults, Despite Labor Disputes. In some sections the intense heat facilitated retail trade in summer goods and improved the attendance at seaside resort, but the most important development in the business world was the increased activity of jobbing and wholesale departments in preparing for autumn and winter requirements. Crop reports are all that could be de- sired, harvest and threshing returns surpassing all but the most sanguine expectations, the few unsatisfactory s‘atements being far outbalanced by the numerous encouraging results, Mercantile collections might be more prompt at some eastern points, but the average is well maintained by dis- counted bills at the west and south. Manufacturing news is still of good progress, the iron and steel industry maintaining phenomenal results, des- pite some labor troubles. High prices prevail in the footwear industry and for most textile fabrics, but the gen- eral level of all commodities reflects the cheapening of farm produets on account of the big crops. Railway earnings in July were 12 per cent larger than last year. Failures this week numbered 174 in the United States, against 222 last year, and 13 in Canada, compared with 19 a year ago. Iron and steel are in unprecedented demand for a midsummer period; building materials, though less active at New York, show few signs of a let- up at the west, where records of prev- fous years have been broken. Bank clearings, while slightly below last week, are much in excess of last year. MARKETS. PITTSBURG. Graln, Flour and Feed. Wheat—No. 2 red Serie ersesuseetnes $ 80 82 Rye—No.2..........« 2 73 Corn—No. 2 ie ear. 61 62 No. 2 yellow, shelled. 60 61 Mixed 60 61 Oats—No. 2 whit 44 45 0.3 43 44 Flour—Winter pa 410 415 Fancy Eiraaghi wint 4 00 4 10 Hay—No. 1 3 {mothy. .::. 1560 1525 Clover No. ¥....%..... Wl. 1076 112 Feed—No. 1 inte mid. ton. 50 230! Brown middlings......... i950 20 0) 200 2150 750 7 A) 750 80) Dairy Products. Butter—EIlgin creamery........... $ 22 213 Ohi0 CTeAMOryY.....coonvsanssae 20 <1 Fancy country roll. 19 20 Cheese—Ohio, new...... 12 13 New York, NOW.....cooveeenecan : 12 13 Poultry, Etc. Hens—per lb......... 11 15 I Na 16 13 Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, t 19 <0 Frults ‘and Vegetablos. Potatoes—Fancéy white per bu.. 85 90 Cabbage—per ton 1300 15 0 Onions—per barrel.. 200 22% BALTIMORE. Flour Winter Faent $50 5 Wheat—No. 2 85 86 Coin dum deny 46 47 “sss sssass ers ass nen 16 20 Butter—Ohio Creamery cee eesnnnss 24 x8 PHILADELPHIA. Flour—Winter Patent............. 508 5 Wheat—No.2 red............ 84 85 Corn—No. 2 mixed 85 54 Oats—No. 2 white 85 86 Butter—Creamery 20 82 Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts 16 20 NEW YCRK. Flour—Patents...... coo -aeenssee$ 500 5 15 Wheat—No. 2 red 89 90 Corn—NoO. 2...... 4000s e 67 68 Oats—No. 2 white.. Se 1s ") Butter -Cream os Eggs—State and SLSR 16 18 LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg. Cattle. Extra, 1,450 101,600 1bs............ $75 $600 Prime. 1,800 01 400 1bs,. . 950 5 70 Good, 1,200 to 1,300 1bs. 515 550 dy. 1,060 t0 1.150 ibs . 47 5 10 Fair, 10 1,100 ib 3 80 4 50 Common, 709 to ¥00 1bs 3 00 87 Common to good fat ox 273 4 00 Common to good fat bulls 2 50 4 00 Common to good fat cows. . . 1.50 87 Heifers, 700 tol, 1001bs............ 250 43> Fresh cows and springers........ 16 00 45 00 Sheep. Primaewetherslx iL. 0. 0x 00, $560 57 Good mixed. . 520 5 40 Fair mixed ewes and wethers.... 4 50 500 Cylls and common 2 50 4 00 Culls to choice lambs............. 5 00 7% Hogs, Frimeheavy hogs... treeqii. $085 6 40 Prime medium ss 6:90 7 00 Best heavy Yorkers. 6:50 705 Good light Toe .. 640 6 50 Pige, as.to qualiiy........ .. X00 710 Common to good Togs. os ... 340 5 80 lags... caverns. 3 00 475 Gates. Veal Calves.. $5 00 79 Heavy and thin “calves. 0 4 5) Oil Markets. The following are the quotations for credit balances in the different fields: Pennsylvania, $1 61; Tiona, $1 71; Second Sand, $1 61; North Lima, 96c: South Lima 9c; Indiana. 90c; Somerset, 89c; Ragland, 69¢; Can. ada, $1.38. The Czar’s Equipages. The Czar of Russia has four sep- arate ‘‘services’’ of horses and car- riages—the Russian, English, French an gala sets. Each set comprises at least 50 horses. The Russian set ac- companies the Emperor wherever he goes, and at Gatshina it is used to- gether with the English set. The gala and French horses and carriages are housed at St. Petersburg, in the winter palace stables. The Czar’s gala turnout consists of 50 Hanover- ian horses, which are perfectly white, with blue eyes. The millions of bushels of Kansas wheat which are being ruined by rea- son of a shortage of harvest hands will find their way into the elevator in due time and be marketed at handsome figures, is the consolation of the Kan- sas City Journal. Having supported himself as a peddler for 75 years, James O’Dwyer of Kilmihil, Ireland, vears old, has, for the first time in his life, been compelled to ask for re- lief from the Kilrush Board of Guardians. who is now 102 | HERITAGE OF CIVIL WAR. Thousands of Soldiers Contracted ! Chronic Kidney Trouble. The experience of Capt. John L. Ely, of Co. E, 17th Ohio, now living at 500 East Second street, Newton, Kansas, | will interest the thou- | sands of veterans who | came back from the CivilWar suffering tor- tureswith kidney com- | plaint. Capt. Elysays: “I contracted kidney troubleduringthe Civil ‘War, and the occasional attacks finally devel- 3 oped into a chronic At one time I had to use a crutch and cane to get about. My back was lame and weak, and be- sides the aching, there was a dis- tressing retention of the kidney se- cretions. I was in a bad way when I began using Doan’s Kidney Pills in 1901, but the remedy cured me, and I have been well ever since.” Sold by all dealers. 50 centsabox. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. case. How He Collected. The editor of a Kansas country paper has found a way of persuading the deliquent subscriber. It was quite accidental. He had borrowed a rifle recently, and he started up the main street of the town to return the weapon to its owner. The de- linquent subscribers got it into their heads that he was on the warpath, and every one he met insisted on paying what he owed him. One man wiped cut a debt of 10 years standing. On his return to his office he found a load of hay, 15 bushels of corn, 10 bushels of potatoes, a load of wood and a barrel of turnips that had been brought in. All the country editors are now trying to borrow Winches- ters, These Are the Days. These are the days when the word “Adirondacks” sounds good to everybody. Up there the sun is just as bright, but the days are never hot and enervating—the nights are always cool and the pine-laden air has that invigorating something in it that brings slecp, appetite, rest, and new life to the jade ah These are the days! The season is at its height. All the hotels are open, and there is room enough for every one. The Adir- ondack country is too vast ever to become crowded. From east, west, north, or south you can reach the North W oods via the The Disappearing Aliigawor, ‘It is reported that at the present annual rate of slaughter alligator leather will soon be a thing of the ! past. It is estimated that the num- ber of alligators in Louiasana is now at least 30 per cent less than it was 20 years ago. Thousands of the rep- tiles are siaughtered merely for sport, and if the present rate of depletion continues, says the Shoe and Leather Reporter, it seems only a question of a few vears when it will be impossible to obtain the hides at a price that will warrant their employment in the manufacture of leather. The Ameri- can tanneries now handle about 280,- 000 hides a year, worth $450,00+ Mexico and Central America furnish 56 per cent of these, Florida 22 per cent and other gulf states the re- mainder. Women as Poisoners. In cases of criminal poisoning a women is nine times out of ten found to be the guilty party. Poisoning is a feminine crime par excellence. The Hindu practice of condemning young widows to be burned alive on the biers of their husbands was a sort of preventive measure against conjugal poisoning.—Le Matin. FITS, St. Vitus'Dance: Nervous Diseases per- manently cured by Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve fossorer €2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr. H. R. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St., Phila., Pa. Doctors’ coachmen in Berlin wear white hats so that a physician’s car- riage may be easily recognized in case of necessity. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens thegums, reducesinflamma-~ tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25ca bottle Balloon Motor. A German has invented a balloon motor for mountainous countries where the grades are too stiff for an ordinary railroad. The balloon is fastened to a slide running along a single steel rail, and floats about 35 feet above the ground. The conduc- tor can make the balloon slide up or down the side of a mountain at will, with hydrogen gas for the ascent and water for the descent. From the bal- loon is supported a circular car with room for 10 passengers. Dog Was Dirt Cheap. Dog Dealer: ‘I can assure you, ma’am, that this dog is extremely cheap at 100 francs.” Possible Customer: “I should like to buy it, but I don’t know what my husband would say.” Dog Dealer: “Madame, mark my word. You'll find it much easier to get New York Central Lines, “America’s Greatest Railroad.” Fluid Lenses. “Fluid lenses” are the invention of a Hungarian chemist. Each lens consists of a fluid substance inclosed between two unusually hard glass surfaces, similar to watch crystals. The lenses are achromatic. The fluid does not evaporate. The new lenses are said to be as good as those all of glass and can be made much more quickly and for a fraction of the price of the all-glass lenses. It is expect- ed that the new lenses will be es- pecially useful for great telescopes. Buried Treasure Found. Beneath .the soil of the South American Republic of Colombia there have just been brought to light some remarkable buried treasures in the line of curious animal-shaped pottery, each incised and made of black clay. These specimens are perhaps the only vestiges left of the vanished empire of the Chibehas, which flourished in this region in pre-Spanish times. H. H. GREEN's Soxs, of Atlanta, Ga.,are the only successful Dropsy Specialists i inthe world. See their liberal ‘offer in advertise- ment in another column of this paper. Moss as a Popular Food. Prof. Hansteen, chief lecturer of the agricultural school at Aas, Nor- way, has been conducting experiments which show that a common greenish- white moss, after being subjected to a chemical process, pressed and cook- ed, becomes a food of the most de- licious and nutritive character. Be- cause of its cheapness, he thinks it is destined to become a popular food for the masses. He finds that nine ounces «of moss, costing two cents, will make a good dinner for six per- sons. The substance can also be ground and used as a meal for bread- making. French Wealth Well Divided. The fact that France is able to hold substantially all of her own public debt, to finance her own industrial enterprises, and still have so much left for outside investment is a re- markable evidence of the thrift of the French people. One reason for the great property of the French people seems to be the general distribution of wealth among the population, large fortunes and great industrial combi- nations being comparatively few in number.—Bankers’ Magazine. ECZEMA AFFLICTS FAMILY. Father and Five Children Suffered For Two Years With Terrible Eczema Wonderful Cure by Cuticura. “My husband and five children were all afflicted with eczema. "They had it two years. We used all the home remedies we could hear of, without any relief, and then went to a physician and got medicine two different times, and it got worse. It affected us all over except head and hands. We saw Cuticura Remedies advertised and concluded to try them. So 1 sent for $1.00 worth, consisting of one cake of Cuticura Soap, one box of Ointment and one vial of Pills, and we commenced to use them. 1 do not know how to express my joy in finding a cure, for two of my children were so bad that they have the brown scars on their bodies where they were sore. Mrs. Maggie B. Hill, Stevens, Ma- son Co., W. Va., June 12, 1905.” For Cleaning Old Brass. A good formula for cleaning ald brass is as follows: Take one ounce of oxalic acid, six ounces rottenstone, a half ounce of gum arabic, powder; ome ounce sweet oil, and sufficient water to make a paste. Ap- ply a small portion, and rub dry. with a piece of flannel or soft leather. all in j another husband than another dog like this.”—Bon Vivant. The Grex atest Boarding College World. University of Notre Dame NOTRE DAME, INDIANA. We guarantee two points: Our students study and our students behave themselves. 18 Buildings. 75 Professors. 800 Students. Courses in Ancient and Modern Languages, English History and Economics, Chemistry, Biology, Pharmacy, Civil, Electrical and Me- goagingl Engineering, ‘Architecture, Law, Short- hand, Book-keeping, Type-writing. SPECIAL DEPARTMENT FOR BOYS UNDER THIRTEEN. TERMS: Board, Tuition and Laundry, %400. Send ten cents to the Secretary for Catalogue. Drill for Water Prospect for Minerals Coal a Drill Testand BlastHoles. We make DRILLING MACHINES For Horse, Steam or Gasoline Power. ates Traction Machine, 2 100MIS Fhclne co., “= « OHIO. wt DROPS NEW DISCOVERY ; gives quick relief and enres worst eases. Souk of testimonials and 10 Days’ treatment Free. Dr. H. H. GREEN'S SOKS, Box B, Atlanta, €a. i PRICE 25: CENTS EE For Baby's Skin & oh Because of ifs Delicate Medicinal, Emollicnt, Sanative, and Antiseptic Properties combined with the purest of Cleansing Ingredients and most r¢- freshing of Flower Odors. Bold throughout the world. Cuticura Soap, 25c., Oint~ m4, Sow (in form of Chocolate Coated ent, 50c., Resolv 8, Be. per vial 1 60). glo set often ts: Aen 27 Sho ; Paris, 5 Rue a la s+ Boston, 137 Columbus Ave, otter Drug & Chem. Corp.. Bole FEoP8: ve 3 Preserve Pw Beautify the Skin, Ee ph Hands of PT a Children.” Smokeless “LEADER” and “REPEATER” The superiority of Winchester Smokeless Powder Shells is undisputed. Among intelligent Q shooters they stand first in pop- § ularity, records and shooting qualities. For Fleld or Trap Shooting. Ask Your Dealer For Them. ) allinflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal con- ditions of the mucous membrane such as nasal catarrh,uterinecatarrh caused by feminine ‘ills, sore throat, sore mouth or inflamed eyes by simply dosing the stomach. But you surely can cure these stubborn affections by local treatment with Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic which destroys the disease germs,checks discharges, stops pain, and heals the inflammation and soreness. Paxtine represents the most successful local treatment for feminine ills ever produced. Thousands of women testify to this fact. so cents at druggists. Send for Free Trial Box THE R. PAXTON CO., Boston, Mass, 60 Bushels Winter Wheat Per Acre That's the yield of Saizer’s Red Cross Hy brid Winter Wheat. Send 2c in stamps for free sam f so catalogue of Winter Wheats, Rye, 8: , Grasses Bulbs, Trees, ete., r § PATHE SEED Cu Box A. Or Lat russes \V in. FERTILIZER LIME 0°70 WALTON QUARRIES, Harrishare., =a P. N. 1, 83; 1906. 48 p. bok free. Highest refs, Long experience. Kitzgoer id &Co.Dept. 54. Wastlnigr nD. WIN CHESTER Powder Shells wg Always use them ¢ € Poultry, and 25c in Stamps. know on the subject to make a success. OTT TOR REE FOE SET FSA OS Chickens Earn “Money ! 1 If You Know How to Handle Them Properly. Whether you raise Chickens for fun or profit, you want to do it intelligently and get the best results. is to profit by the experience of others. all you need to know on the subject—a book written by a man who made his living for 25 years in raising in that time necessarily had to experiment and spent much money to learn @ the best way to conduct the business—for the 1 small sum of 25 cents in postage stamps. : It tells you how to Detect and Cure Disease, EV how to Feed for Eggs, and also for Market, which Fowls to Save for Breeding Purposes and indeed about everything you must SENT POSTPAID ON RECEIPT OF 25 CENTS IN STAMPS. BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE, i 134 Leon4ro ST. N. Y. ciry. ; The way to do this We offer a book telling A i i § § i ¥ 8 i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers